You’re reading this in fragments. Right now, between notifications. Your phone just buzzed. You’ll check it before finishing this paragraph.
This is how literacy dies: not in silence, but in the roar of infinite content.
The collapse is measurable. Book readership among adults plummeted from 55% to 48% in a single decade. Among teenagers, the freefall is catastrophic—those reading daily for pleasure halved, from 27% to 14%. We’re watching the human capacity for sustained attention disintegrate in real time.
But the numbers hide the horror. We haven’t stopped reading—we’ve forgotten how. We bounce between Twitter threads and TikTok captions, Discord arguments and AI summaries, consuming words like addicts consume pills: constantly, desperately, without nourishment. The average American scrolls through 300 feet of content daily. Three hundred feet of nothing.
This isn’t evolution. It’s amputation.
The books gathering dust on your shelf aren’t just unread—they’re becoming unreadable. Try opening Tolstoy after a day of tweets. The sentences feel foreign, almost hostile. Your brain, rewired for dopamine hits every seven seconds, rebels against the slowness. You’ve been trained to skim, to extract, to move on. The ability to sink into text—to let it reshape you—atrophies like an unused muscle.
Now AI promises to finish the job. ChatGPT will “read” for you, compress War and Peace into bullet points, transform Ferrante into a chatbot. Why struggle through Ulysses when an algorithm can extract its “key insights” in seconds? We’re outsourcing not just reading but thinking itself.
This is the end of interiority. The death of the inner life.
Because deep reading was never about information transfer. It was about becoming someone else for three hundred pages. About holding complexity without resolving it. About discovering thoughts you couldn’t have had any other way. When we lose the capacity for sustained reading, we lose the ability to think thoughts longer than a tweet.
The tech prophets call this progress. They say we’re returning to “conversation-based oral cultures,” as if Bronze Age storytelling and algorithmic summaries were remotely comparable. They pretend the Gutenberg era was an anomaly, not the foundation of every scientific revolution, every social movement, every expansion of human consciousness for 500 years.
They’re lying. Or worse—they’ve forgotten what they’re destroying.
Watch a teenager try to read now. They check their phone every ninety seconds. They screenshot passages instead of absorbing them. They ask AI to explain what they just “read.” This isn’t a generation choosing different media—it’s a generation neurologically incapable of the sustained focus that built civilization.
The professors know. Students arrive at universities unable to finish assigned chapters. They submit essays assembled from AI fragments. They’ve never experienced the transformation that comes from wrestling with difficult text. How can they? Their brains have been formatted for continuous partial attention since birth.
We’re creating a world where no one can follow an argument longer than a TikTok. Where complex ideas die because they can’t be compressed into content. Where democracy fails because citizens can’t process anything more complex than a slogan.
The deep readers still exist—hidden, increasingly rare, like monks preserving manuscripts while Rome burns. They’re the ones who still know what we’re losing. Who remember that reading Proust isn’t about acquiring “content” but about developing a consciousness capable of perceiving time differently. That philosophy requires holding paradoxes for hundreds of pages. That literature’s power lies not in its summaries but in its sentences.
But they’re being drowned out by the content tsunami. Every second, 6,000 tweets, 1,000 TikToks, 100,000 Google searches. The noise isn’t just distraction—it’s obliteration. It’s making sustained thought physically impossible.
Your brain is being colonized. Every app is designed to shorten your attention span. Every algorithm rewards the fragmentary over the complete. Every AI tool promises to save you from the “burden” of reading. They’re turning your mind into a slot machine that pays out in micro-doses of dopamine.
And you’re letting them.
Because it’s easier. Because War and Peace is long and your commute is short. Because AI can tell you what happens. Because you’ve forgotten the difference between knowing about something and knowing it.
The last generation that could read—truly read—is aging. When they die, they’ll take with them humanity’s ability to decode its own culture. We’ll be surrounded by libraries we can’t enter, thoughts we can’t think, wisdom we can’t access. We’ll have Shakespeare’s complete works and the attention span of goldfish.
This isn’t technological determinism. It’s a choice we’re making every time we reach for the summary instead of the source. Every time we let AI “explain” instead of experiencing. Every time we choose the feed over the book.
The infrastructure for deep literacy took centuries to build. It’s collapsing in a decade.
There’s still time—barely. You could close this tab and open a book. You could train your brain back into coherence. You could refuse the algorithmic feeding tube. You could remember that consciousness isn’t content, that wisdom isn’t information, that the human capacity for sustained attention is what separates us from every other species and every machine.
But you won’t. You’ll share this article—maybe quote-tweet a fragment—then return to scrolling. The next notification is already pulling you away.
This is how literacy ends. Not with book burnings but with infinite distraction. Not with censorship but with a species that can no longer read what it once wrote.
The books will survive us. Waiting, unread and unreadable, like messages from a lost civilization.
Which we’re about to become.
_ _ _ _ _
Until we meet against, let your conscience be your guide. And if you’re still a reader, check out the book I recently wrote.
_



Wow, Bret! Perhaps, also, this suggests why political discussion has degenerated into a battle between two camps of battling second graders. Very disturbing!! Thanks !!!
The loss of interiority is what bothers me the most. The groupthink of the herd has always been a danger, but now the wheels of conformity have been thoroughly greased.
I read about this tech couple the other year who dropped out, moved to the country, and gave up the hyperconnected worlds of smartphone and internet. At first they found it excruciating, but little by little, their concentration spans improved and they started reading books again.
So the damage is reversible. But how many people would take that option? Everything associated with education and work now is hooked up to virtual reality and digital abstraction. Reflection, contemplation, and original, independent critical thinking is increasingly being regarded as self-indulgent, nebulous, pretentious, wooly. Depth has become stigmatised as elitist.